Welcome

The CITE, a blog published by the National Association of College Stores, takes a look at the intersection of education and technology, highlighting issues that range from course materials to learning delivery to the student experience. Comments, discussion, feedback, and ideas are welcome.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Student Aren't Learning About Ed-Tech

A recent study has found that while college students
may be proficient in the personal use of electronic devices and social media
sites, those studying to become teachers aren’t getting much instruction on the
classroom uses of the gadgets.

The study, Digital Experiences and Expectations of Tomorrow’s Teachers,
is part of the Speak Up survey from the 2011-12 school year conducted by
Project Tomorrow and Blackboard Inc. It
included responses from nearly 1,400 students in teacher education programs, as
well as 36,000 in-service teachers and 4,000 administrators.

Despite familiarity with electronics and social media,
two-thirds of students in the survey said they learn more about using
technology through field experience rather than classroom assignments. In
addition, 45% of principals surveyed said they want new teachers to use social
media in their instruction, but just 25% of the students said they’ve learned
how to do it.

The study found that two-thirds of the principals want
new teachers to create and use video and other media and 45% want them to find
ways to use student-owned mobile devices in their lessons. However, only 44% of
the responding students said they were being taught about the use of video and just
19% said they were learning how to incorporate mobile devices.

Students said the technology they are learning about is
word processing, spreadsheet, and database software (71%); creating multimedia
presentations (64%); and the use of interactive whiteboards (55%).

“While these are arguably valuable skills for teacher
productivity, principals have a different set of expectations about the
technology experiences they want to see in potential teaching candidates,” authors
of the report wrote. “Principals want new teachers to know how to use
technology to create authentic learning experiences for students (75%) and how
to leverage technology to differentiate instruction (68%) before they apply for
a position at their school.”